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Create a credit agreement valid under the laws of England and Wales. Covers term loan, revolving credit, overdraft, and deferred payment facilities in GBP; annual interest rate and APR disclosure as required under the Consumer Credit Act 1974 and Consumer Credit (Total Charge for Credit) Regulations 2010; default interest referencing the rule against penalties in Cavendish Square v Makdessi [2015]; arrangement fees; monthly instalment or bullet repayment; security registered at Companies House under Companies Act 2006 Part 25; personal guarantee provisions with independent legal advice notice; financial covenants; events of default referencing the Insolvency Act 1986; unfair relationship notice under ss.140A-140C CCA 1974; and Late Payment of Commercial Debts (Interest) Act 1998 for B2B credit. Governing law: England and Wales. Download as PDF or Word.

What Is a Credit Agreement (England & Wales)?

A Credit Agreement is a legally binding contract under the laws of England and Wales between a creditor (the party providing credit) and a debtor (the party receiving credit), governing the terms of a credit facility — whether a term loan, revolving credit facility, overdraft, instalment credit, or deferred payment arrangement. It records the maximum credit available (the Credit Limit), the interest rate and APR, the drawdown conditions, the repayment schedule, any security or personal guarantees, financial covenants, events of default, and the parties' remedies.

Credit agreements in England and Wales operate in a regulatory framework shaped primarily by the Consumer Credit Act 1974 (CCA 1974) for regulated consumer credit, and general contract law for unregulated B2B credit. The CCA 1974, as reformed by the Consumer Credit Act 2006 and the FCA's Consumer Credit sourcebook (CONC), regulates agreements where a creditor provides credit to an individual in the course of a consumer credit business and the agreement is not otherwise exempt. Regulated agreements must comply with strict prescribed terms, APR disclosure requirements, copy and execution formalities, and FCA conduct rules. Unregulated B2B credit agreements are governed by general English contract law, the Late Payment of Commercial Debts (Interest) Act 1998 for commercial debt interest, and — where security is taken over company assets — Part 25 of the Companies Act 2006.

Key legislation: Consumer Credit Act 1974 (ss.140A–140C unfair relationships; s.197 director loans); Consumer Credit (Total Charge for Credit) Regulations 2010 (APR calculation); Late Payment of Commercial Debts (Interest) Act 1998; Insolvency Act 1986 (insolvency definitions and waterfall); Companies Act 2006 Part 25 (charge registration at Companies House); Limitation Act 1980 (six-year limitation period for simple contract debts); and Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (FCA authorisation for regulated credit businesses).

This template provides a flexible credit agreement structure covering multiple facility types, with optional modules for security, personal guarantee, financial covenants, CCA unfair relationship provisions, and the Late Payment Act statutory interest right for B2B credit.

When Do You Need a Credit Agreement (England & Wales)?

When a private lender, trade creditor, or non-bank finance provider extends a credit facility to a business borrower — such as a supplier offering deferred payment terms, a finance company providing asset-backed credit, or an invoice financing firm advancing funds against trade receivables — and needs a formal written agreement to document the facility terms and enforce repayment.

When a company provides a revolving credit facility or overdraft to a related or connected company — for example, a parent company making a credit facility available to a subsidiary — to ensure the terms are commercially documented, at arm's length for HMRC purposes, and properly secured.

When an FCA-authorised consumer credit firm enters into a regulated credit agreement with an individual customer, and the agreement must comply with the Consumer Credit Act 1974's prescribed terms, APR disclosure, 14-day withdrawal right, and copy requirements.

When structuring a trade credit arrangement where a supplier allows a customer to purchase goods or services on credit — for example, 30 or 60 days net payment terms — and the parties wish to formalise the credit terms, default interest (including statutory LPA 1998 interest for B2B transactions), and debt recovery costs.

When providing secured business credit and the lender wishes to register a fixed or floating charge over the borrower's assets at Companies House under Part 25 Companies Act 2006 to protect its priority against other creditors and in any future insolvency.

When a personal guarantee from a director or guarantor is required alongside the credit facility, to provide the creditor with an additional recourse against an individual in the event of the company's default or insolvency.

Without a formal written credit agreement, creditors have no documented basis for charging interest, no agreed events of default, no defined security interest, and limited legal recourse. English courts require clear written evidence of the credit terms to grant summary judgment for debt recovery under CPR Part 24.

What to Include in Your Credit Agreement (England & Wales)

CCA 1974 Classification — Confirmation of whether the agreement is a regulated consumer credit agreement, an unregulated B2B credit agreement, or a high net worth individual exempt agreement. This classification determines the mandatory regulatory requirements applicable under the Consumer Credit Act 1974 and the FCA's conduct rules.

Parties and FCA Authorisation — Full legal names, registered addresses, and Companies House numbers of the creditor and debtor. If the creditor is FCA-authorised to provide regulated consumer credit, include the FCA firm reference number (FRN) on the face of the agreement.

Facility Type and Credit Limit — The type of credit facility (term loan, revolving credit, overdraft, instalment credit, or deferred payment) and the maximum amount of credit available (the Credit Limit) in pounds sterling. For revolving facilities, the availability period during which drawdowns may be made must be specified.

Interest Rate and APR — The contractual annual interest rate, the APR (mandatory for regulated consumer credit; best practice for B2B), the calculation basis (actual/365 or actual/360), and when interest accrues (from drawdown). For B2B credit, the Late Payment of Commercial Debts (Interest) Act 1998 statutory rate of 8% above Bank of England base rate applies to overdue commercial debts automatically.

Default Interest — A separately stated default interest rate applicable to overdue amounts, acknowledged by the parties to represent a genuine pre-estimate of additional loss in accordance with the rule reformulated in Cavendish Square Holding BV v Makdessi [2015] UKSC 67.

Arrangement Fee — If charged, the amount and when payable (typically on or before first drawdown). For regulated credit, arrangement fees form part of the total charge for credit used to calculate the APR.

Repayment Structure — Whether repayment is by monthly instalments (with the instalment amount, due date, and total number stated), bullet repayment on a maturity date, revolving repayment within the credit period, or on demand. The final repayment (maturity) date must be clearly stated.

Security — A precise description of any fixed or floating charge over company assets, the obligation to register the charge at Companies House within 21 days under Part 25 CA 2006, and the creditor's enforcement rights on default. The agreement should note the consequence of non-registration: the charge is void against the liquidator and other creditors.

Personal Guarantee — If required, confirmation that a separate personal guarantee is executed alongside the credit agreement, the guarantor's full details, the scope of the guarantee (typically unlimited in amount), and a notice that the guarantor should seek independent legal advice before signing.

Financial Covenants — If included, the specific financial ratios or minimum performance thresholds (e.g., minimum cash balance, maximum leverage ratio), testing frequency (quarterly or annually), and the obligation to deliver compliance certificates. Breach of a financial covenant is an Event of Default after a notice and cure period.

Events of Default and Acceleration — Defined triggers for immediate repayment (missed payments, insolvency under the Insolvency Act 1986, breach of covenants, appointment of an insolvency officeholder), and the creditor's remedies on acceleration (calling in the full balance, enforcing security, calling the guarantee).

Unfair Relationship Notice — For regulated consumer credit agreements, acknowledgment of the court's power under ss.140A–140C CCA 1974 to reopen the agreement if the relationship between the parties is unfair, and confirmation that the debtor has been advised to seek independent advice.

Governing Law and Jurisdiction — Confirmation that the agreement is governed by the laws of England and Wales, with exclusive jurisdiction of the courts of England and Wales, consistent with the Limitation Act 1980 (six-year limitation period for simple contract debts).

Frequently Asked Questions

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